2OO0OOOOOOOOOOOO0OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0OOCOCQ00 BBIL LATUriLo 3 trnitf W Met EmilT. and Took in the Picnic and Made 6 IWW w I - , a Speech. By W. . ROSE, In Cleveland Plain Dealer. JOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCXJCOOOOOOOCX) ' The man paused at the curb and looked up at the building. He bad grossed the street to get a closer view ct It. It was a square, three-story brick building, with some pretension 2 architectural grace. The entrance way was broad and approached by a vide flight of atone steps. The trim mings were of stone and the bricks ere newly painted. The man stared up at the building and shook his head. -Not a bit like the old building," te said with a regretful Intonation. He was a man nearing sixty, gray haired and portly. His figure was ttralght and his eyes keen. It was evident that be had cared well for himself, and that his energy and rigor were but little impaired. His gaze turned from the building and wandered about the neighbor hood. "Everything Is changed," he mut tered. "There Is nothing I recog nize" He turned away alowly with a lin gering glance at the building. "Those were' good times," he mut tered. "It was nearly fifty years ago, and yet when I shut my eyes It seems bat yesterday. Memory plays us queer tricks." He quickened his pace as he turned back to the busy highway and when ht reached the corner he paused and looked at his watch. "Five hours to kill," be said to him self. "How shall It be sacrificed? There arc no old friends to meet. .Who would remember me?" He looked up. A street car was approaching. It bore the name of a park. The man hesitated. Then he ran forward and boarded It. The ride was a pleasant one. A tool breeze circulated through the ear, and when the downtown section was passed the residences bad an at tractive look and there were pleasant glimpses of the open country. Then the rippling blue of the lake eaae in sight and the man took off hat and let the breeze stir bis gray hair. When the park was reached he lighted from the car and stared about him. It was a pretty place, the loping paths descending to the lake and pleasant groves crowning the higher ground. There were neat buildings scattered about one side of the enclosure, with a dancing pa vilion and other features of the con ventional summer resort; and at the other side were the shady picnic grounds. There seemed to be a picnic there at the time, a lively party if the man eon Id judge by the laughter that came to him In little gusts. And suddenly his memory reached back to the school picnic at Elyrla, and the one at Bedford, and .the one at Rocky River. He hadn't been to a picnic since those old days. A queer longing came to him. He turned his steps toward the dis tant merrymakers. A young girl was approaching, a girl of seventeen, light-footed and bright-faced. She was swinging a pall and the wind Mew her fair hair about her white forehead. . The man stopped her. "Is that a picnic yonder?" he asked. The girl looked at him wonder lngly. "Why, yes," she answered, "that's the picnic ground." "I am a little rusty regarding pic nics," the man explained. "I haven't picnicked for nearly fifty years. , Is It a school picnic?" . "It's a sort of school picnic," the girl replied. "It's the yearly outing of the Stonewall School Association." Tho man looked at the group be neath t,o trees with a new Interest. "That's strange," he said. "I went down to look at the old building to day, but they had covered it up." "Did you ever go to Stonewall?" the girl asked. "Yes," he answered. "But I know nothing of any Stonewall Associa tion." "It Is open to everybody who ever went to Stonewall. I graduated from there four years ago." The man put out his hand. "The old greets the new, my dear." " gently said. "Let 1905 clasp hands with 1865." The girl's bright eyea sparkled. "How lucky It Is that you are here, sir," she cried. "I am aure you will be the very oldest graduate present" Ha drew back a little. "But I am not Invited." "Oh, you don't need to be Invited," cried the girl. "Every graduate of oia Stonewall Is welcome. Thv m all be glad to greet you for old Stone- - suite, iou must come, must indeed." He smiled at her eagerness. i uuve no snare to add to the ne said. . "Tnere ,s Plenty." cried the girl. There la sure to be a great deal left, iou win come, won't you?" He gravely nodded. T ...111 - . come,- ne answered, "but not Just now. A little later. I want uuwu na renew my splashing .uiiDutv wuq me lake. '.. i .... ur u.uuer win be ready In a half hour - .aid the gin. -And I am go ing to save a seat for you nest to UllDO, "Thank you." said the man as he drew out his watch. "in jUBt half an hour you will see my famished form u j now- .1 , ,WtJf and ndered down the slope to the ..nH. k-i. and dabbled his hand la the curling W 11 f U . n .1 1 .. a - uru across me blua ax- pansa. fc l00k ont his watch -f.u iv wan iime ror the ment at the picnic board As be oeared the table he noted that Wo.t of the part, were seated, ft"d tdou fa; siw that hi young friend a:i savins hor hand to him He IZl ",7 "n' tber te vacant ..... . , .., ner on lna DBncn 1 d ever ,o niuoh trouble In sav you Ing It," she told him as he took the seat. "So many people wanted to sit there." He gave her a courtly little bow. "I am not at all surprised," ho said. "You do me much honor." The bright eyes sparkled. "I had to say It was reserved for a very distinguished guest. And when they asked me who It was I could only look mysterious. Are you a general, or a senator, or a governor?" The man suddenly laughed. "When I was a boy at old Stone wall nothing short of President would have satisfied me. But you may call me governor, If you like. Of course .there must be a bargain. I am going to call, you by the name of a girl I thought very nice In that old time. She was called Emily. I think you are a good deal like her." It was a merry dinner. There was enough of everything and a most won derful variety. The man, whose ap petite was a fickle possession, found himself eating with the gusto and the rellBh of a boy. And he liked .the laughter, and the clatter, and the bright faces about him, and the sunlight among the leaves, and the blue line of the lake. And the girl beside him watched over his plate and saw that he was well supplied and kept him smiling with her lively chatter. But, really, there was little time for talk. There was so much plate passing and so many things that mustn't be missed, and there was such a fleet of little side dishes to consider, that anything like conver sation was quite out of the question. But presently the end of the feast was thankfully reached, and the man leaned a little back from the table with a grateful sigh. ended. I am the onlv veteran to an swer Here.' " He drew a deep breath as he looked back to the chairman. "Could yoa blame ," he asked, "It I said I was sorry I had aroused these memories? To-day I looked' at tha old school. It was not the same. I look over the gathering. Tho , faces I knew are not here. Do you wonder that the sunlight darken, that the blue of the lake fade3, that the trees whisper mournfully? " He paused and looked down. The girl bad caught his hand. He bont toward her. "My grandmother was Emily Stur. gls," she murmured. The man looked down Into the bright face and his own faca suddenly softened. "The past Is bridged again," ho cried. "Another Emily Sturgls Is here." He looked toward the chair man. "Am I talking too long?" "Go on," a hundred voices an swered. The man laughed. "I will," he said. "I have a mes sage or two to deliver. One Is from a great singer whom I met in Lon don a number of years ago. It was after a concert In which she had won a .wealth of applause. I knew she was an Ohio girl, and It was not long before we found we were both from Stonewall. 'Here,' she cried. 'I send the dear old school a little message,' and she ripped through a verse ot 'II Bacio.' Then she told me that this famous 'Kiss Waltz' was the first song she sung in the old assembly room, and 'I still love It better than any thing else I sing,' she cried. That's message number one. The second one comes from Peru, where we were building a bridge across a deep ravine, and the young engineer In charge of the American workmen was a Stonewall boy. It was a hazardous job, and one day the lad laughingly said to me, 'If I miss my footing you, must send and ask them at old Stone wall to drap Jack Sawyer's desk in black.' But nothing happened to tha boy, and the work was successfully) completed. And that's my second! message. In San Francisco I found a Stonewall boy on the judicial bench; In Portland a Stonewall boy;' THE UNDERWORLD IS AT YOUR DOGR. To Increase Salnrlcs. The Bryn Mawr Alumnae Associa tion has just paid in the first install ment of tho million dollars which It proposes to raise for the college. The fund Is to he used to increase the sal aries of tho prpfessors. The, first In stallment, which Is just $100,000, la to endow the chair of mathematics, which has been held by Professor Agnes Charlotte Scott since the foun dation of the college. New York "un. Keep Still. EEP still. When trouble la brewing, keep still. When slander la getting on its legs, keep still. When your feelings are hurt, keep still till you recover from your excitement, at any rate. Things look different through an unagitated eye. In a com- motion, once, I wrote a letter and sent it, and wished I had J not. In my later years I had another commotion, and wrote a long letter; but life rubbed a little sense Into me and I kept that letter in my pocket against the day when I could j iook it over without agitation and without tears. I was ; glad I did. Less and less It seemed necessary to send it. I was not sure it would do any hurt, but, In my doubtfulness, J I leaned to reticence, and eventually it was destroyed. Time J works wonders. Walt till you can speak calmly, and then you will not need to speak, maybe. Silence Is the most massive thing conceivable, sometimes. It is strength in very J grandeur. Dr. Burton. . eeoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee eeeeeeeeeeoeeeeeeeeee eeceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaeseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee eeseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeseeeeeeeeeeeeeee "Quite satisfied, governor?" the girl inquired. "Yes, Emily too satisfied, if that's possible. Even the fact that I'm an Interloper doesn't lessen my serenity." And then the presiding officer ot the association arose to call the gath ering to order and to announce a lit tle impromptu program. It began with a song in which almost every body joined. It was an old song, but not as old r.s the songs the man had sung when he was a boy ,at Stone wall. "I'm sorry I didn't bring my 'Golden Wreath,' " he whispered to the girl. "I'm sorry, too, governor," she whispered back. "I would like to hear you sing." He shook his head at her. "Great singers always dine spar ingly before warbling," he whispered. "I'm afraid I won't be able to sing for a week." She laughed aloud at this and a half dozen voices warned her that she would have to stay after school for such an infraction of tha rules of good order. The presiding officer called for re marks from various members ot the association, and these remarks were all reminiscent and most of them of a humorous character. And there was more singing, and somebody read a half dozen playful verses and then the chairman looked toward the man be side the girl. "We have with us at this Stonewall banquet board," he said, "an unex pected guest If I am credibly in formed, he is one ot the old boys ot old Stonewall. As a Stonewall boy he must recognize the fact that he cannot remain a stranger here, for he is linked in that impalpable chain that grapples fast all Stonewall hearts. In the name ot the old school I bid Mm speak." The man slowly arose and looked about him. "I thank you sir," he said to the presiding officer. "I am grateful to you all for this fine privilege." He paused and looked about him again and this time bis glance was delib erate and searching. "I am grateful and I am happy grateful because the day ia fine and the world is fair, and happy because contentment is happiness, and because tbla charmed air is charged with joy. Is it wise for me to disturb the serenity by turning back 'to those daya of the long ago?" He hesitated a moment. "Tbere were twelve ot us boys in the class of '65. We touched elbowa in our studies we laughed and played and fought together. Where are those boya now?" He suddenly raised bis voice. "Ia Richard Pelton here?" he cried. He waited there was no response. "Ia Arnold Burnham here? Ia Henry Gorham?" Hla voice grew tremulous. "Why do you not an swer? Ia Edward Thompson here, or John Thruber, or William Grace, or Roger Brown, or Tom Stanton? No answer. I'll try again. I call for Theodore Graf, and Martin Gray, and Stephen Burns?" He paused and waited. "Not one will answer," he said. And then his voice softened. "And there was a girl in the class. Her name wa Emily Sturgls. Is Emily Sturgls here?" He listened for an answering word. "The roll call ia was mayor. I found these excellent products of the old school quite by, accident, and I don't know how many, scores of them I may have missed. There was another message to old Stonewall, a message from the desert. It came years ago when I was cross ing the Nevada waste alone. My mare went lame and I was forced to lead her. As I plodded along I found a lost prospector. He had missed his bearings and his water supply had given out and he was in the early stages of a fever. And almost the first thing I heard him babble was the name of old Stonewall. He was back with the boys again in the schoolyard. Somehow I got blm on my tired mare, lame as she was, and together we stumbled along that frightful waste, the stranger laugh ing and crying over his schoolboy tricks In the queerest way. Well, we got somewhere at last some place where water trickled and human voices broke the maddening silence with gentle words. I dropped with a fever myself just then and never knew what became of the prospector. After I came to myself I found my friends had taken me across the Cali fornia line, and when I was able to send word and ask about the pros pector nobody knew anything con cerning him." He paused a moment. "I have often wondered what became ot him. His home was In this city and he was a Stonewall boy. Can anyone here tell me what became of Robert Lamson?" ... There waB a sudden hush. Then a gray haired woman who) was sitting nearly opposite the man suddenly leaned forward. . "Robert Lamson is alive and well," she said In a trembling voice. "He is a good citizen, a bappy husband and father." Her .voice suddenly choked. "Let me reach your hand," bus cried. "I am Robert's mother!" Then everybody cheered and laughed and cried, and in the midst of the tumult the man sat down. "I'm glad I came, Emily," he whis pered. There were tears In the girl's bright eyes. "You're Just a splendid governor!" she cried with a little catch in her voice. Then the presiding officer rapped for attention. "It Is quite evident," he said, "that this isn't a very big world, and I be gin to think there are Stonewall boys and girls In every part of it, helping it along and helping one another! " And then they all cheered again. How It Came About. An Alton man who testified that ha took a little whisky every day on ac count of hla heart finally got that or gan in such good condition that he shot and killed an unarmed citizen over tbere who also bad a habit of taking a little something tor his stomach's sake. Jewell City (Kan.) Republican. A Good Alarm Clock. Husband "Why don't you hivt Bridget shut tb? kitchen door? Ont can smell the breakfast cooking all over the house." Wife "We leave It open on puN pose. The smell Is all that gets tha family up." Judge. Quits Typewriting t Till Soil. Miss Myra Wolcott. a Chicago sten ographer, has been one of the lucky drawers In the Government lottery for the 3000 homesteads In the Coeur d'Alene Indian reservation, Idaho. The young woman intends to settle on the land she has won, and already has abandoned the typewriter to go nnd become a tiller of the soil. Four other Illinois women have drawn homesteads. They are Mrs. Abbie Ellenger, of Freeport; Miss Stella O. Berkley, of Casey; Miss Essie Ana wait, of Galesburg, and Mrs. Mary M. Steagall, of Carbondale. New York Sun. Clcopntra's Code. Some men are in love with them selves, and In that at least have no rival. According to what the man Is, so must you humor him. Do not read books alone, but also men and chiefly yourself. Never show your own cards. Let the other player lead, then follow suit. Do not In trying to escape from the trite become paradoxical. Try to combine both love and re spect. Let your personality triumph over your occupation. New York Herald. Sentence Suspended. Mrs. Sophie Pirek, of Cleveland, Ohio, was fined $10 for stealing thirty-five cents' worth of scrap iron from a railroad track so soon as some mem ber of tho Chamber of Commerce or some other person of means can be found to care for her three children. Only a short while ago several of the The trouble now Is the acquisition ot the glide. For the glide of the George Eliot heroine went out of fas hion many years ago and since then women have minced, galloped, el bowed, wiggled, hopped, skipped, schottlshed and rolled like a sailor amidships. Hut they have not culti vated that slow, sinuous, inslduous,' even stealthy Btep which was part of the equipment of the heroine of by gone fiction. Consequently It looks as though there might be tempest uous times ahead for the woman who wants to wear Tanagrenne tunics and limp trails and all the other floppy draperies recommended by the pres ent modes. Pittsburg Dispatch. Keeping V.yoa nrtglit. There 1b no surer giveaway of ape or indicator of Ill-health than the eye. It has been called "the window nf the soul;" It nitght more truly be dubbed the donrplnte of the body and Its habits. Many a woman who has a soul above reproach has eyes that show her body to he. all wrong. If one is fatigued. Is over fond ot eating, is a night owl, or is over strained, the eye will be dull, heavy and lifeless. Above all, the eye is the sign of physical upheavals. When the eye Is not bright and clear, especially if It looks puffy or has that "sick look," keep a sharp watch for your health. It may be only bllliousness, but It may also be kidney trouble or internal disarrange ment. Whatever the cause it is time to discover It. Thle le a far wiser plan than to take anything to keep the eyes bright. There are women so foolish as to eat arsenic under the impression that It will brighten their eyes. It will also ruin their nerves, weaken the heart, and may eventually mean invalidism for life. Even more foolish Is It to put drops in the eyes to give them luster. Why tamper with our most precious possession? Never use anything in the eye without consulting an ocu list. It Is not safe to take risks with a delicate organ. If nothing else de ters, the fear of glasses should teach sense. Should the eyes feel heavy they a I "The underworld," says Charles I Somervllle, in Everybody's, "has no separate topography. It moves con stantly at the elbow of respectability. Its Infamous aristocrats are ever In the haunts of fashion, and Its low browed, bumble toilers In the crooked lanes are living rheek by Jowl with the decent poor. "ThlB Is what your all-seeing eyes could surely show you of the under world; nnd more startling still, per haps, might be the discovery that Its Inhabitants are not altogether differ ent from you and me. More wlir-.il In their weaknesses, certainly, they are; more hysterkal In their hilari ties; blinder In their loves and bit terer In their hatreds; supinely sub ject to all emotions, good or bad, un doubtedly .... I remember bo well the first time I saw a burglar In flesh and Mood. His black mask was off, his revolver was In the posses sion of the police; he had just been sentenced to ten years' Imprisonment j and was saying jrood-by to liis wife ! and three little children. lie was wholly like any other grief-stricken human being. His sob was the same. He was a sandy-haired man with ; rather large, foolish blue eyes. It , was hard to Imagine those same large, blue eyes looking very terri ble, even behind a mask." "Tfirtra1 raw HOUSEHOLD MATTERS Slnmbcr Bogs. ' v Slumber bags of heavr wool ta plain colors are replacing the steamer fug for deck use by many travelers, the bag laces up to the neck and la provided with a hood. It Is especial ;y good for the convalescent. In llanapolls News. How to Have Good Lamplight. Don't use the wick up to the last .Hch; get a new one when the old oie ta clogged or stiff. Rub the burned part oft with a soft :loth every day don't cut It. Put freBh oil in the lamp every lay, but don't fill It quite full. Leave n Inch of space at the top. Keep the outside of lamp clean and Jry and you won't be troubled with, oily odors. Wash chimneys every day nnd the jther parts once a week, using a little immonia and soap to cut the grease. Polish chimneys with a soft news paper. Before using a new chimney wrap In a cloth and place in a kettle of cold water. Bring to a boll. Boil for fifteen minutes. Let the water cool Before removing the chimney. No srdlnary heat will break a chimney treated In this way. Boston Post. words of wisdom. OS ji 2- S u f OS a ckz S i Onion Souflle. Pour one cupful of hot milk over two thirds of a cupful of grated breadcrumbs. Let stand until soft, then add one cupful of chopped cold stewed onion, one cupful of milk, three beaten egg yolks, a saltspoonful of salt, a light sprinkling of pepper and one tablespoonful of butter. Mix well, then fold In the whipped whites of the eggs; turn Into a buttsred baking dish and bake forty-five minutes In a steady oven. Serve at once without redishlng. leading business men of Cleveland appeared before the Chamber of Com merce and demanded that less lenient treatment be accorded In the police courts to women arrested for thefts of coal and Iron from the railroad tracks. The police judge who im posed the provisional sentence on Mrs. Pirek said that be would hold the case open for one month, and in the meantime the woman's sentence is suspended that she may earn a liv ing for herself and her three chil dren, the youngest of whom Is less than six months old. New York Sun. Source of Proflt For AVomcn. Illuminating of documents Is a new field of work for women in England, and it might recommend Itself as a congenial and profitable employment for women in this country. Mrs. Ha-mer-Jackson, of London, Is urging women to take up the work, which she says peculiarly t,longs to them. Mrs. Hamer-Jackson is one of the best illuminators in England. She makes a large income and does all her work at home. She describe? il luminating as an art. Her work is devoted almost exclusively to the dec oration of public addresses, books and cards in the fine floral scrolls and designs, often spotted with gold and silver, in the style of the old Anglo Saxon and Gothic manuscripts. Mrs. Hamer-Jackson says there is practi cally unlimited work to be done for private persons. It Is her plan to or ganize a school for the Instruction ot young women in the work. New York I'resr. An Artistic Tench. ' The woman whose aim Is to reveal a touch of the artist in her home Just at present Is Interested in the old fashioned candlestick. It Is a revival as happy In its way as that of the re turn to favor of Sheffield or pewfer ware. The candle held Its own against the oil lamp, but lost Its pop ularity when gas came in, and it was practically outlawed whe.j electricity came into general use. Now, how ever, many women of society are using candles extensively. One so ciety leader, In fact, has gone to the extreme ot having electric fixtures removed from several rooms, relying entirely upon candles for lighting. These candles she displays in antique candlesticks ot beaten brass. Tall Russian candlesticks now are seen on many library tables, and tall silver colonial sticks are on many dressing tables. New candlesticks a-e shown In pottery on wrought Iron, but an tiques are first In favor. The prices ot old brass candlesticks have ad vanced greatly In the last few weeks, and few now are to be found In the antique shops. Brooklyn Eag'.e. may often be freshened by bathing with weak salt water, either hot or cold. This can do no barm, and by relieving strained conditions will fre quently improve the luster. One woman says she has used a little orange, juice in her eyes for years without injuring them. A few drops are inserted In the eye with a dropper. After the first Rmart the eyes are brighter and clearer. As this might be injurious to other wom en, though not harmful In itself, It should not be used without the ad vice of a physician. Philadelphia Ledger. Summer love and winter matri mony ore no more alike than cham pagne and cold tea. The average man marries a woman In order to escape loneliness ard then Joins a club in order to escape the woman. j To most men the "drink problem" Is merely a question of whether to 1 order a beer or a highball. Nothing disturbs a man worse than ! to find that ho has stirred up a wom an's temper except to find that he can't. There are Just two endlnqs to a love affair temporary despair It you are disappointed, and life-long regret if you are not. Don't fancy that it 1b always Im- pertinence that makes a man try to ' kiss you; It may be only curiosity or just to pass the time. Tho savago brings a club to the set tlement of his domestic troubles; the j civilized man takes his troubles to I the club. j The fly that seeks the sticky flypaper : Is a wise and intelligent being beside I the man who makes love simultane ously to two girl chums. A woman doesn't object to being i kissed so much as she objects to a man thinking that she doesn't object. Real luck In love consists In being able to get out of It gracefully. The less confidence a man has In ; his ruling powers the more he in ! Bists on an outward show of defer j ence; tho Turk Isn't afraid to let his women wear the trousers and smoke cigarettes. Nowadays no gentleman will stoop i to tempt a woman especially if he j can Induce her to tempt him and thereby shift tho responsibility. I The hardest task a mother has is j to teach her child to be patient with his father. ! Now Is the timo of the year when the lucky bachelor congratulates him self that nobody is coming home to discover that he spilt Ink on the par lor carpet, broke the best coffee pot and left the windows open for tho rain to ruin the curtains. From "Reflections of a Bachelor Girl." s Washing a Sweater. It Is no difficult matter to wash a sweater at home, and It usually comes out as well as if it had gone to the cleaner. Wash it in tepid soap suds, rinse it thoroughly and spread It on tho grass if there Is grass. If there Is not a yard, hang it on a coat hang er which has been thoroughly padded with a towel, says the New York Evening Sun. The trouble In drying wool sweaters Is the stretching of the sleeves from the additional weight ot water and the stretching out of shape of different parts that are clipped to the line by clothes pins. One woman who washes her own sweater threads the sleeves through a clothes line and straightens, the garment on the line. If there is clean grass it is as well to dry it on the ground, straightening the garment perfectly while it is wet. But the sun tans a white sweater, and it should be dried on a cloudy day if this means is used. About the House. When flavoring has been forgotten In a pudding or cake the fault may be remedied by rubbing the desired extract over the outside of tho cake as soon as It Is taken from the oven. Put bits of soap Into a tin cup with j a little hot water and enough corn or j oatmeal to thicken, stirring all to j gether till the soap melts. Let the mass harden In a cake and you have j a nice bath goap. ' To patch umbrella covers get a sup ! ply of black court plaster from the j druggist, which is silk covered with i an adherent. Moisten the adherent ' with water and fix over the hole on I the outside of the umbrella cover, - pressing firmly down. A very neat patch is thus. made. To prevent rugs from curling at ' the corners bind them on the under side with a piece of narrow webbing . like that used to hold furniture ' springs In place, or with a two-Inch ; strip of light weight oilcloth. Bos ! ton Tost. -r . Destroyed Money. It Is estimated that ovci one-half million dollars In paper money is destroyed In the country In one year. Many complaints come to the Treas ury Department concerning destroyed money from persona who are of the opinion that the country should stand their losses. One woman wrote a few days ago that she had dropped a twenty dollar bill in a meat chop per and that it had been ground to pieces. A large quantity or green backs is eaten up each year by rats, which find Its hiding places. One peculiar case is reported of n robin flying through a window and then flying out again with a one hundred dollar bill in its mouth. Enough of this greenback was found in the rob in's nest to warrant Its redemption. Washington Star. A Change In Wnlkt. The woman of the present is con fronted with the necessity ot having a wardrobe of walks. One ot these must be a stride; the other must be a glide. The former is reserved for .he trotteuse gown; the latter is got jut with the classical robes whl:h are now worn on formal occasions. The most women already have at their command the stride. Tnat Is part ot the free, boisterous, sturdy lype of girlhood which has for tho past years been our natlenal Ideal. Orange Is among the most popular colors. Low shoes ore ornamented with big buckles. Straight coat seams may be trimmed, but never the lower edge. Washable chamois gloves are shown in both the natural color and white. Tucks still hold favor, but buttons have outrun them in the race for first Place. The directolre tie, made of crochet lace, Is a pretty finish to the dressy blouse. There Is a remarkable prevalence of foulard in the handsomest daytime gowns. Collar'.ess gowns are more freely worn in daytime than for many sea sons past. Kimono dresses for the little folks are cool and simple enough to Insure style and comfort. i Gray suede boots, with pearl but tonB, are attractively worn with gray i walking suits. ' White ties with dark gowns are I seen in some costumes, but the idea is J in poor style. Net gloves, the coolest things that ! can be worn, may now be had with embroidered backs. j There Is a rage now for cream white buKs, worn with bat and acces sories of nut brown. The latest belts of heavy gold braid differ from their predecessors in that tbey are of dull rather than ot bright metal. Stoles and ecclesiastical designs have crept Into the toilet quietly, but with evident Intention to stay for awhile. Lace veils are edged on both sides with fancy borders and serve for scarfs as well as tor enveloping the hat and face. Pleats set In " the side or quite around the skirt below the knee sug gest the returning fulness ot this part ot the costume. A bit of hand embroidery Is a dainty finish to tbe tight-fitting sblrt waist sleeve, which is cut pointed over the wrist. The gutmpe of flesh-coiOiVjO tulle, ! which naa received so much comment, has been superseded by a chemisette . Every public school In Germany has The gray now favored by fashion- gymnasium and there are certain sole women Is really a grayish rose ! hours on certain days whr a physical tutor rhavlng a subtle touch, ot .thej culture of boy's and girls of all classes rose beneath tbe gray. , ( nd ages Is sons through. w Down the Old Iload. The fireflies twinkled in tbe tall grasses like myriads of tiny stars. "You John Luther Elderberry!" giggled the pretty girl in the pink sunbonnet, "I am surprised." "Surprised at what, Cynthia?" drawled the lanky youth a her side. "Why, a you, standing there and kissing a lone, defeuseless girl that way." "Oh, don't worry about that. Cyn thia. Here Is another way." And the moon man came out from behind a cloud and grinned until it seemed bis face would crack. Boston Post - I - Ji. dentle Aspcritlon. Among the prisoners brought be fore a Chicago police magistrate one Monday morning was one, a beggar, whose face was by no means sn un familiar one to the Judge. "I am Informed that you have again been found begging In tho pub lic streets." Bald hla honor sternly. , "and yet you carried In your pocket j over 10 in currency." "Yea, your honor," proudly re I turned the mendicant. "I may not be as industrious as some, but, sir, I I am no spendthrift." Harp?r's Weekly. Doilies In White Honse. Mrs. Taft has taken up the fasten of using dollies for both the breakfast and luncheon table. It is a plan that has been gaining favor In Europe for several years, and originated with a French woman who was proud of her mahogany table and wished to give her guests a peek at It. There Is an other good reason for the cuBtom. The doily takes away from formality, nnd also per:nits of more tlisplny of the varied taste of tho hostess than the heavy and conventional table doth. Doilies are shown in a profu sion of patterns and designs. They may bo worked by the hostess herself, and are graded In size to match plates nnd cups nnd saucers and glasses. Mr. Taft uses dollies on the round table In the White House dining room for breakfast nnd luncheon, unless there are guests who demand a show of formality. They also are found on many other tables In Washington and In this city, and their uses seems con stantly to be becoming more general. New York Press. As It Ought to He. Things would be groatly simplified If the man who Is 111 would always enjoy eating enough, and If tbe man who Is well could enjoy retraining from eating too much. Lemon Ranee. -Three quarters cup cup sugar, one-quarter cup water, two teaspoons butter, one tablespoon lemon juice. Make a syrup by boiling sugar and water eight minutes; re move from fire; add butter and lemon lulce. linked Ilocts. Beets retain their lugary, delicate flavor to perfection If they are baked Instead ofboiled. Turn them frequently while in oven, using t knife, as the fork allows the jutca !o run out. When done remove the ikln and serve with butter, salt and pepper on the slices. Candied Orange Peel. Drop fresh) peel Into boiling wa;er, and boll gen ;!y until it ran be easily pierced with i straw. Make sufficient syrup t :over. In proportion of one pound su gar to one pint water; cut poet Into narrow strips, drop lata syrup and boll gently until transparent, then nce more rapidly sprinkle with gran ulated sugar and dry a few hours in av rlightly warm even. It directions are followed this will be found very go-jd. Hquanh liiscuil. One and one-half eups alfted squash, one-half cup su gar, one yeast case, one cup milk. one-half teaspoon salt, four lable ipounfuls butter, five cups flour; s:ald - the milk, pour It orer, add the but ter, sugar and salt, and when luke warm add tbe yeast rake dissolved ia one-half scant cup ot lakes-arm wat er. Stir Into tbe flour, knsad well; let rise tilt light, form Into biscuts and 1st rise one end a halt hour: kake out-half hoar in good hot cvtit.